• Michael Wolff says last week’s State of the News Media report is particularly bad news for news organizations that hope to make money on mobile. “The bleak or non-existent future for news professionals in a mobile-dominated world is further compounded by our remoteness from, and antipathy to, the thing that has always fed us: advertising,” Wolff writes. || Related: Top 100 apps in the iPad Newsstand Bring in $70,000 a day (Dino Grandoni/The Atlantic Wire)

• U.S. Rep. Chellie Pingree‘s husband, Donald Sussman, now owns 75 percent of MaineToday Media, publisher of the Portland Press Herald. He hasn’t added to the $3.3 million his Maine Values LLC put into the company earlier this year, but what was a loan has been restructured as a stock purchase that values the company at $4.4 million, writes Matt Wickenheiser.

• Jack Limpertleaves Washingtonian. “None of the city magazines in the country would look or act the way they do today without” Limpert, Washingtonian editor Garrett Graff tells Paul Farhi. Limpert, Farhi writes, is taking his typewriter with him.

• Amit Chokshi is back to torture Media General management with a report on the upside he sees to its stock. Chokshi’s view gets rosier if consultants identify efficiencies, renegotiate the company’s debt and clear the decks to sell its newspapers. (Media General’s Tampa Tribune competes with the Poynter-owned Tampa Bay Times.)